The Case of Jennie Brice, Mary Roberts Rinehart
The Case of Jennie Brice, Mary Roberts Rinehart
4 Rating(s)
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The Case of Jennie Brice

Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart

Narrator: C. M. Hbert

Unabridged: 3 hr 42 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/24/2009


Synopsis

The bloodstained rope and towel, the stray slipper, the broken knifeand the disappearance of the lovely Jennie Bricewere enough to convince Mrs. Pittman that murder had been committed in her boarding house. The police, however, were another matter. Without a tangible body, there could be no official murder charge.Mrs. Pittman ran a respectable establishment and was not about to harbor a killer on the premises. If the police couldnt see what was in front of their noses, then she would have to take matters into her own hands. As the landlady, after all, she had the perfect excuse to do a little judicious snooping.

About Mary Roberts Rinehart

In her prime, American novelist and playwright Mary Roberts Rinehart was more famous than Agatha Christie. Originator of the phrase "The butler did it," she is best known for her mystery stories-including The Circular Staircase, The Man in Lower Ten, and Tish-which combine murder, love, ingenuity, and humor in a style that is uniquely her own. Several of her suspense novels were turned into Broadway successes, including The Bat (which was derived from The Circular Staircase).

Mary Roberts was born in Allegheny Pittsburgh in 1876. In 1896 Mary graduated from the Pittsburgh Training School for Nurses, married physician Stanley Rinehart, and started a family. Financial losses drove Mary to take up a writing career in 1903. Childhood memories such as the nearby state penitentiary, the one-armed policeman, and a mute neighbor inspired her novels. Five years later, her first novel, The Circular Staircase, became an instant success.

In addition to her novels, the public grew to know Mary through the magazine serials and essays that she wrote for the Saturday Evening Post. During World War I, Mary served as a war correspondent and was one of the few that were allowed to report directly from the trenches. At the time of her death in 1958, her books had sold more than 10 million copies.


Reviews

Goodreads review by The on January 13, 2023

These people took proving a point a little too far and, of course, things got out of hand.......more

Goodreads review by Ryan on June 01, 2011

I think where this book sucked me in was the setting. Much like the last Mary Roberts Rinehart book I read, The After House, the setting is what dictates the story. Pittsburgh in the early part of the last century tended to flood every Spring. The problem was all the water, the Allegheny and the Mon......more

Goodreads review by Elizabeth (Alaska) on August 13, 2018

I did not read this edition, instead getting my Rinehart titles from The Collected Complete Works of Mary Roberts Rinehart:. But what was the cover designer of this hardcover edition thinking? I don't know who the person is supposed to represent as the cover bears no resemblance to any of the charac......more

Goodreads review by William on January 26, 2015

4 stars when written. 3.5 stars now. So continues my tour of Golden Age mystery writers in an attempt to see whether any of them hold a candle to Christie. To date, I've found Patricia Wentworth and Josephine Tey to be disappointments, though I will give the latter a second go. Dorothy Sayers had a v......more

Goodreads review by Stephanie on March 12, 2016

As a rule I love MRR's books. When compared with some current writers, I find her books to be incredibly well-written, and if somewhat convoluted due to the back-and-forth of the plots, at least it keeps you on your toes! This book was by far the easiest one to follow and ready - I think my copy had......more